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Française. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
Française, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
Française in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From French Française.
Noun
Française (plural Françaises)
- (rare) A Frenchwoman.
1925, The American Legion Weekly, volume 7, page 19:So many of the Françaises marry you Americans that in twenty years—pouf!—their children will overrun France and it will be France no longer.
1938, James Laughlin IV, The River (New Directions Pamphlets; 3), New Directions:As Craig said, having looked over the françaises he could understand why the frogs didn’t want the Germans to get Paris.
1989 November 8, Richard K. Paynter, “Class Notes”, in Princeton Alumni Weekly, Princeton University Press, →ISSN, page 30, column 2:In August, Bob Middleton and his friend Anne Jacobs celebrated his son Rob’s first wedding anniversary in Paris. Rob married a Française.
1997, Leslie Choquette, “The Age of Adventure in an Age of Expansion”, in Frenchmen into Peasants: Modernity and Tradition in the Peopling of French Canada, Harvard University Press, →ISBN, part I (Modernity), page 158:The Françaises were considerably younger than the westerners; 90% rather than 77% of them were under the age of thirty.
1999, T[racy] Denean Sharpley-Whiting, “Representing Sarah—Same Difference or No Difference at All? La Vénus hottentote, ou haine aux Françaises”, in Black Venus: Sexualized Savages, Primal Fears, and Primitive Narratives in French, Duke University Press, →ISBN, page 35:The baron’s imaginings, nonetheless, bring difference back (the unknown) into the familiar space of sameness by measuring the beauty of the “femmes sauvages” against familiar French frames of reference: the Françaises.
2001, The Quest, volume 89/90, Theosophical Society in America, page 17:Diana Dunningham-Chapotin is a New Zealander by birth, an American by adoption, and a Française by residence (as she likes to be near her husband).
2022, Aloïs Guinut, “Inside Parisian Style”, in The Little Book of Paris Style, Welbeck, →ISBN, page 23:The French love of scent continues, with most Françaises regularly using it.
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from French Française.
Pronunciation
Noun
Française f (plural Françaises, masculine Fransman)
- a Frenchwoman
Synonyms
French
Pronunciation
Noun
Française f (plural Françaises)
- Frenchwoman
Anagrams